ANTI-M4SONIC STAR, I AND REPUBLICAN BANN}tIt. • ---7-- , .I, , h 7i?A .%l e :' • fIC::: . .. ;.•.--:` ';; J , _I",P rt•rxs:. _ ,'•... "%•:.• ----`• 4 11, , so ' 4 t -i. 7 q„'l . ;, ' f, , , :1 '-• , , , ; , 4,‘,.:,, -- 40 t3 t, , ,, , ..;,.....•...,..:.,..,. -... ; ,,,'.1 ,- -..,:;.2:70 , 1 , -..- . .'!i' .P.,..4,`...d r, z.'-4, '' \. ' ti.... 4 C 3 'l's. 'f i , e lf. •:.: • - f ,, , - „er „,..Irci. .I:' , . -1' •-.,,, •.. , 46 0 C',...--`4,...,%:VT•t- ti:Vii '..l.tiCr, ''' -1....” ' .. j,: t .• •,. . le .. , ,N.:. , ''" . .c" -- ..- .- --- G 14 17 T Y. ..; 13 IT P..C: , Pa. Ali )1 NY 3111531. BA LT II: ORE DIARN ET. From t;:a Patriot of Saturday last FLOUR—Howard street.—The receipts this . 4diek aro about 5010 hrls. less than those of the Ala.' We qu,,te tie :dere price, nt noon yoster icy, at 5 25. 'The Wagon price from tho begin ning of thstweek until Thursday was $5, but since then some of the denlcrs hove paid $5 06i and occlsionnlly 5 . 1;24, while others continue to receive ut iiie-previovs rate of $5. WETEAT—On Salurdayinst, a cargo of shout - 3000 West Branch Fersquelinnna wheat. was Sold from store ati‘l 17 ror bushel. On Wed nesday p,curgo %bout 3000 North Branch was sal from store at. 11. A lot of fitlo bush. prime Wert Brntich wn.s taken :,esterday at to fill up a vessel from floropo, but it mom' !.e said to aircrd-a criterion of the market. A Parcel of prime %Vest Branch was ollbrod yostnday, - but that price could not be Obtained. 0111 1 eLAP 7 .9 PAINTING.--This dese-vedly celebilitedllrot;ction of nativo talent, il! he open for exhibition in this borough, on. TO-11011. ROW and the two following days. Tholfe who have visited —it- in ether places,--pronounce it "creditable to the state. of the pictoral art in this country, and as justly augmenting the high repu tation as an historical painter, which his previous works have produredfor - Mr. Dunlap." "QUI CAPIT, ILLE FACIT." "Man, in his indiidual capacity," feellng him self •'hound to sustain 'ram' and JUSTICE," should "at all times, and under all circumstz , noes," if it is in him, do so. But man, so prono fossil, some; times, under spine "circumstances," is either born without TiUTII or• so given up to his natural pro . pensity,`Tharliiii - Tittliessential is oftentimes .a stranger to his bosom—or if it_isinlim at all, it is so deep that it cannot "be brought to light."— Hence we see such practical demonstrations of this evil every day. If it.wcre not so, - why should we find-such feelings of opposition portrayed by our fellow.nien toward each other? Why is it else, that-the-moat sincoreintenlions to act uprightly, 'are so glen designedly misconstrued? Why do we fiod'heinge so. ra-.3tless'as to be 'over ready to impugn the opinions, when sought after, of men who stand above roproach—me,n whose moral and political chraacters will "at all times, and udder all eircutnitances," stand the strictest scruitiny? It is true, "that the coward may be instilled with courage" to mask himself and endcavor.to stab the chmeter and - reputation 01 him who may, tinfor. tuna& y, differ in some point of view or othor from him; but it does not follow that attacks will "at all times, and under a'l cirenmaance," prove in- jurious to ;Lim against whom 07 aro directed— but like the arrows of malice, oftentimes recoils upon him who aimed them, and like the "Lloody ghost ofEangno," ho sinks down, down, far benthith the notice,of all good men, and becoines n fit aim, elate of restless, howling spirits. lUSOME SIGNS OF REPENTING! triNIORGAN'S MURDER CONIT.SSED!La Sfantking of the tat daitatet, ductors of Morgan," the Compiler men say— " FXFired with indignation at him mho had OPORTATISED/FOM their FAVORITE PRINCIPLES, they rushed furtn in the might of their fury, bidding cit:lance to - thilaws of tAcir Country and the laws nor P ten. t:ar , UPON THE LiINCILE I.:. . These spirits of candour again say— may- bri - allegodi - that, it the Insti tution was not privy to it, why did it not spurn from its bowels this corruption in hu man shapo Why did they not extend to outragedliw the diabolical actors of this nelariousoscheine, in order that. future gen erations alight liave-saag their imp;irtiality and jutitice. This :could certainty hare • been exalted condlict, ALTTIOrGII rr OAR . RIED WITII IT INGRATITUDE. The Irish father who pa: : , isocl :.entente upon an only beloved son, who had forfeited his life, by committing murder, well deserves im mortality: "Father! Father! have mercy upon ~ my yotith:' 'A's a father I mourn for you;but as Magistrato I condemn you to the scaffold. Justice is stern and must be satisfied.". I question very nuteh:wheth - er this magnanimous father could have con deniaed.his 6311 had he luifeited his life i n Do,FENcr of his grey hairs. It is too lofty 1:10,f6r human nature--the father • must have . prevailed. For the same, reason, masons may have condemned the outrognpon Morgarr's lib . erty—ryet,fecling that it ,had Zeen - madly done IN pEFENCE Or rAvoituru • • PLEB THE COMMON IMPII I.SF,S OF NATURE.. FORI:ADE THEIa EXPO SURE!!! . • rriro that.oan, let him 'read-211.e . ,that cannot, lot him hear die" above road. AGAIN.--The:so me honest harid eity, the per. ._...petrators- of the daring'outrage committed upisit a free citizen, " fop geCul alike. of their: count and their God, EITCOit'W.7,I/M..1 V.',./:;D AN 'JURY 9F .40141EN7'0 US .)LtG N LID E":.'!! " Now, all we have to say to this lioncat band rs— . :'To keep ou tnirking stiCit acknowlodffnionts—a . .. I ntlivonfitssiion is good for the squl" —lay' ariilo \ yob,: . afistootutis , tiAls sad..rrincelv robes, and ~, - ---,, 01 . 0113.• the , sinll.4l7 ; gariaonts wltioli 111-..e.i6 MCA :s 3 asp % oar, Irdelibon. ion tit be ' firl,lsti Ifni& - ------ - THE NTIrMASONIC . STAR AND REPUBLICAN BANNER. THEY DROOP!—The MaEonita aro quito chop-rallen since their Waterloo Defeat, at the late urough election. Hut weather, eh! . E.USH'S' LETTER is in great demand every where that it meets with a Press independe:nt enough to publish it. In Bortan, twenty -thous and copies have been published to pamphlet form betide an extensive circulation through the Free Press and two or tlnee other independent jour nals. It has been widely circulated thro' the Albatry Evening Journal, yet to meet the urgent &mend for thi:i valuable produrtioh; the Ethtorof the Journe.l has been compelled to issue 10,000 eapies.in pamphlet form. The N. Y. Commercial. Advertiser, Spectator, American, and Gazette, •• • ugh Masons, published Mr. Rush's let ter. Notwithstanding the wide circulation giv en it by the N. Y. Whig when first received, a 'second insertion has been proi.ised. Abioad and at home in our own State, all who sincerely thirst after truth are not only anxious, to read it, them. celve4, but are desirous also that it should be read by others. Beside .an extensive circulation thro' the columns of the!, "STAR," upwards 0f,500 co. pies were issued in pamphlet form,& should the de mand continue asgreat as it has been for the last few dlys, we' shall . be compelled to publish a sebatill supply. Vet, notwithstanding the cry . for this , ble production, neither the SENreIN EL eiir the cOMPILER have had independence enough to puldigh it—in consequence of which, many of' their'SURSCIZIBEIZS have been obliged to call on us for a copy—So =eh for Masonic thraldom! LAYING. OF Tim CORNER STONE. Agteettbly to arrangement, the CORNER STON E of the Edifice of the Theo!viral &min. 'ray in ilrin place, was laid On Thursday last. Al -111,5n el the morning vv.as somewhat inclement, yet there were sevoral thousand persons present. The ceremony opened by-a--By-mn from the (heir, and a Prayer iTy the Rev. Dr: SrIIMUCKER, of York—The .audience was addressed by tho Rev._Messrs.l.TaloaN and lacK in the Gorman, and the Rev. Messrs. Sen. , ,:rFra and KRACTII, in the English Language. 'After which, the Cornet Stone was laid by the Rev. Messrs. I.lEvEit and At 3 o'clock P.M. the Anniversary Addresses of the Students wore delivered. We were not pre sent, Lut are informed that the Addresses gave general satisfaction. At night, the Graduate Address of the Rev. Mr. HavEnsTicx, of Cumberland, Md., was delivered. We were much pleased both with the address and delivery. Mr. H. bids fair io make a fine speaker, and an able labourer in lit's Master's Vineyard. The May Nos. of the Casket and Lady's Book were received last week. They are in our opin. ion superior to any numbers yet received. Ow ing to a press of other matter, wo are unable to insert any thing more than tho "Embellishments' , and "Contents" of each work. ai — See advertise ments. Ef"SATURDAY COURIER" noxt wook MARFA - 4EIPS SENTENCE: By Chief Justice Buchanan. After a rigid and .laborious examination of many witnesses, and an attentive and pa tient hearing of counsel in your behalf, who, with a zeal and ability creditable to them selves and worthy of a better cause, left 'un done, in conducting your defence, nothing hat ingenuity could suggest, you have been renounced guilty, by a Jury of your choice, oldie horrid crime or murder of the fit'st de (Tree, attended by circumstances, disclosed n evidence? of the most shocking character or w sic i you are doomed to suili.r the highest and Most solemn punishment known to the laws of this State," whose sentence it has become my duty, as the organ of this Court, to pronounce: A duty, to the dig. $ • Urti i .,-; . _ -appmteii, with. ieet-m rs car respondent,to the appalling Amigo itticiP..Q. c the olftmee with which you stand chaigod, my deep, settled and painful conviction of, your guilt, and the awful nature of the pen-'' alty you have incurred. to— To die is the appointed lot of man; but death, in its mildest and luast hideous form, is not devoid of terrors, even for such as are best prepared to die. It is a sad adieu 'twist soul, and body, until the coming of that day, when, at the sound of the last trump,. the portals of the &aye shall be I thrown open, and the - earth be made to yield up its dead. And, when it is inflicted as a just and merited punishment for crime—when a murderer is called to yield up his life on the-, altar of retributive justice, however obdurate he may have become, however seared his conscience, and whatever outward appear ance of hardihood and insensibility he may assume—it is difficult, if not impossible, for him to contemplate it without horror, and -an awful and inward dread of entering upon a different ~-and an -unknown state of exis tence, in ariother and unknown world, with the stain of upon his hands, and the weight of withering and cousuming - guilt pressing upon his soul. Murder of any degree, and under any circumstances, is shocking to huinanify; and he who is not lost to every proper feeling,. Must ever turn from, the contemplation of it with abliorence—buLthai which has been perpetrated byliiii, bears the stamp of the higlv:st grade & atracity. • ~ „ John New6y, who was your une:le, and in whose blood you have so cruelly - and wick edly revelled, was, • some years ago, unfor= tonately for bun and his family, , called, by the procesS of this cowl, to give evidence ,er . ,...ist you in a pi•osectitioil that consigned :yeti to the penitentiarY;for Which; as now iippears in evidence, yeti then made a voiv of vengeance, out have hut too faithfully -IcepA that fatal vow.. liiscliargett from the penitentiarY, on the expiration o f om.. term for ; which you were Sentenced, with 'revenge, •"' '...uklinsi' in tem.:hen/11; and bent uioii' a. ~.. the destruction not only of him, who had alone offended, indeed, offence it could be r.Wled, to give evidence when required in a court of justice,) but of all his family= you sought the habitation of your devoted victims, and. : at the still, dread hour ofiight, stole into the'apartmerit in which they slept, unconscious of their approaching Cite, and dreaming of nought. but safety; under their own peacelL - irand quiet roof. Did you not shudder as you entered into such a sanctua ry? Did you not pause and tremble, ere you gave the first fatal strok,9-1 A v. ile confidently repoiing in the arms of her_ husband, .and bearing the unborn pledge of their mutual affection, (and such learn was the advanced condition of Mrs. Newey,) . witli:her two little childrer, sleep ing at her side, was a scene fit fok - ahgels to come • down from heaven to • look .upon--a scene calculated it would ,SeCl4l, to excite he warniest syMpathies oithe hu Man Heart, o shelve the settled purpos2, and stay. the iplitled hand of the.most hardened and prac ised assatisi4 - . Yet it - did not unsettle your bloody purpose, nor arrest your murderous hand. But in the. emphatic language of the indictment,-''being moved and seduced by the instigation of the devil," for 110 other influence could have prompted to snit an outrage, you broke through all restraint, and regardless of the laws, both ofG od and man, and reckless of every consequence, plunged into a scene of shocking and complicated crime, to whicli_no parallel is remembered, and such, as it is believed the pages of judi cial history furnish no record of. The hus- and and wire, their two little innocent children and unborn infant, her father who 'lodged in a room above and a lad an initiate of-the - house,—were all, all involved in one common ruin, all inhumanly murdered, and by you. And after having first plundered it, with the calculating coolness and delib eration of a demon, you set fire to the house in which they had slept,'in imaginary se- curity, and which but for you might have continued the abode of innocence and peace; with a view no doubt, toobliterate all traces - if violence, by consuming their mangled and lifeless bodies in the devouring element, and thereby to destroy all evidence of their haviag come to their untimely end by means of any human agency. But did you also hope to lude your guilt, from the all seeing and omnipresent God, to whom all things are known, and from whom no secrets are hid? Vain and pre sumptuous hope—the very means resorted to for safety and concealment, proved the ready and sure means of your detection. The flame you lighted to -consume their bodies, served also to attract and light the neighbours to the scene of desolation, before the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Newey were entirely consumed,. the mortal wounds still visible upon which plainly indicated that a murderer had been there! though, horrible to relate, the bodies of all the rest were burnt to ashes. The finger of suspicion directed by the unerring- hand of Providence, pointed to you , as the fell destroyer of those, for whose blood you will soon be required to make atonement with yeur own; and notw ithstand iug. your supposed well laid scheme of con cealment and imaginary security, you blind ly carried about you the damning evidence of your guilt, unconcions of the dangers that beset you on all sides, and of the stroke that was about- to fall upon and crush you. ' So it has always been, and so it ever will be- , -- Sooner or later, the vengeance of .heaven - never - fails to-o% y 1 take-the-Imilty,Suelvare the inseruitalle workings of providence, and such the blindness and folly of poor, vain and frail humanity. Do me the justice to believe, that I have no—wish-t4L-insolt-or_unnecessarily wound your:.feelings.l...A93 Anima... ,414!).. ,1.._..!... here for no such unhallowed purpose, and should be unworthy oithe seat I occupy, if I were capable of wantonly doing so.. But painful us the duty mond deeply as I regret having such a duty toperform, I must speak of things as they 'are, and earnestly hope, you may be. awakened to a just and Inn sense of thb enormity of the guilt with which You ate unlortupately overwed, and of the heltA necessity there is, for elide; vouring to ho e• .. • prepared to meet the in e doom that awaits y ou. And that you will - not suiThr yourself to be drawn into a Fatal delusion, by an ill grounded hope of pardon, or ofany interposition in your behalf by the Execu tive authority of the state, of which I feel it my duty to apprise you, that I sincerely believe, there is not the remotest probabili ty. Permit me thei•efore to entreat you, to turn your attention while yet you may,...to that high and read tribunal, upon - , which, all you have now to hope for, peace and hapEitlpss in anotherwOrld, MUst lone de v, - 4 -pen, •-•%-ond earnestly and diligent to, em ploy what yet remains to you of th``s transi tory life ; in humble supplication to the Throne s of' Grace, for pardon a.nd fyrgive ness of your sins; and may God of hts,in finite mercy incline and guide yo,ur heart to penitence and prayer, strengthen and sup port you in the hour of trial, mid . suffili: you not at the last sad moment; for' any pains of death, to 'fall from him. ' Your sentence ts, that you tii be taken to the jail. of Frederick county from whence you came, and thence to- the place of exe cution, at, such time as shall be duly appoint. ed, and that you be there hanged by the ieektuntil yen are deed. - , . NlOR'rEttElt CUitiNhNGh M,- lake Post Master at Abington, in this State, who was tried . ,and acqnitted a few. weeks as wilt he recollected, oh a:charge ,of robbing,Mte U. S.. Mail--waa3 yesterday tried far the niitiderneaner ullegekagainst bim---nanaely_, that ofdetaining and opening le . ltera ronvm: ( l-41 f.) his oflice in 4lic Mail, On this-oharge, after a laborious investiga tion, and an able defence- he-was convicted --the jury not having been absent from the ox more t on twee fence of which he has thus been convicted is punishable by tine and imprisomMent. This morning at the opening orthe Court Judge Glenn sentenced Cunningham to pay costs of prosecution, a fine unify,: dollars and imprisozunent in Baltimore county jail for six niont4s.--Baltimore Patriot. CALUMNY REFUTED. The Mdmbers ,of the Pennsylvania Le. gi.shitore, ropmsentiug..the CitY.a.nd ( 2 04 11 .4. of Philadelphia have published the lollowing note in the Philadehhia Sentinel— , _4l reply to the cge 7 Oflir . i-hory put forth against tifat body, by the Ney Hampshire. Patriot,. and adopted into the Washington Globe— bi)th good and true papers of the Van PM ren - School. The atrocity of the charge might well warrant soincpotice of it; other wise there was nothing in the Character or the papers, which gaVe it coinage and cir culation, that should have required this for mal contradiction: -- The undersigned have read in , the Gj o b e ,7 an article republiShed _ from.. "the New Hampshire Patriot" which contains the following assertion: "From all that we have seen, it is appa rent that the Bank, (meaning' the Bank of the United States,) attempts b# sustain it self by a system.OlcOrrupt bribery; that tliis Lystem procured the passage of the Penn sylvania resolution in favor of the Bank." This declaration is not only made without qualification, but is accompanied by remarks • which render it particularly off'ensi've. The undersigned are conSeious, that it Auust be an extraordinary case, which should induce then) to notice, in any manner, news- I 'paper Comments upon the proceedings of the legislature of Pennsylvania. But they cannot to observe, that in this free min try,. a charge like the above, published in a leading democratic paper-and_re-published in the paper Which is understood by the peo ple to be the official organ of the national administration, relating to a public question, upon which the legislature attacked have differed in sentiment from the head of that administration, -.possesses a consequence, which - under other circumstances, Could hardly be attributed to it. The members of the legislature that pass ed the resolution in question have returned to their homes; and the un(lersigned, a por tion of these members, residing in and near Philadelphia, having au opportunity of con- Veniently interchanging views, deem it an act oflustice to their constituents and to the people of Pennsylvania, to proneunce • the charge, no matter by whom mode; by whom repeated, or by whom. countenanced, to be an unfounded and Atrocious libel. Sand. B. Davis, Anthony Lazissat, C.J. Ingersoll, _ Charles H. Kerk, 7'. M. Pettit, Charles Brown, .Toseph Taylor, Henry Simpson, J. 1?. Burden, Wnz. I " Rieh'd Pelts, Thomas Heston, Jos. Goodman, DS. Hassinger, John Felton, John Carter. Philadelphia, May 18, 1831. WASHINGTON COUNTY, MD. ANTI -MASONIC CON VEN77ON. From the Ilagers.Town Herald. Our fellow-citizens are respeettitlly invi ted to the Anti-masonic Convention to be had in Ike courtAloutte, in lia(ror.oowib nn Saturday, the 4th day of June next, at 1 o'- clock P. M. Our constituted authorities guarantees the •right, that every citizen is a sovereign; - and every citizen or citizens have a right peay7a bly to assemble in Convention, or other'iViSe, le--tutilteli:eowriltheirl':gfievancrwiitiLarty - do exist. We do believe that. srerci societics,_espc, daily the Institution or Freemasonry, to be repugnant and dangergus to our republican i list it ittions. The public prints, to lade the guilt of the Kidnappers mid murderer:: illorgan, have endeavoured to turn the outrage into a farce —but since facts have been established in Courts of Justice, that it was a conspiracy of - Abe members of the Institution of Frpe masonry, who kidnapped and murdered their brother and fellow .citizen, for revealing the secrets of the mystic order--as soon were the presses muzzled, and are silent a: the • grave;. yet every fugitive, horse thief, and murderer, are noticed and sounded in the columns of the public preses—from Maine, •to Orleans and Arkansas. The liberty of Press is our strongest key, by Which : we Z.an protect the iuncicent and overtake the guilty—a monitor to thoSe in power, and a security to a republican government. • The grievances set forth are the causes why wo assemble in Convention, at which t,ime the head of the Great Monster will be more fully shown. It is stated that the French Courts have established the right of Catholic Priests to be married. . From Martinique we learn that one hun dred arid AMA of the negroes who were en gaged in the late revolt in that Island had been executed: • • Van Buren's Letter--Tranitttion. Sony! of_ntir wise EkcliWrfri, appear to be at a total loss to. ascertain the rtiCaning of tte ex-sccretary's'lotter of resignattort: • A little close study, might enable them to penes trite the enigma. - - • The . first paragraph.; iiititer rriech.anically •Cir the grand hailing Sign o y nimu l'he second, complains that hehas been found out. • .'l'he third, exposes - the-squabbling of the lot- • • . . . such things were not, in the "earlier stag° of the republia.' The' fourth, hifils at the alarming necessi ty of restoring inanethate harmony among the contending elements of the party, lest they become a bye-word and a reproach" to furei\gn nations. The fifth, repeats what a good patriot.he is—and what ti great sacrifice he _has mado - -=winking to the rest of the cabinet to . flee wit l him from the sinkingship, ) The sixth, tells us, that he cannot be Presi dent next term, because old Hickory is in the way. _T h e seventh says he. will go abroad in the land, and be ale next President altpr {inn. The eighth, tells us, that for "considin a tilits partly cif a public, and partly of a per sonal nature," could not sooner mature his plan of operations. The ninth, begs the mantle of Gen. Jack son, when he throws is aside. The tenth, solicits hiin to kiss, and piiit good friends. This, as near as we can comprehend thu matter, is about the substance of the ex-se cretary's letter of resignation.—Sen. Farmer. [The-public,as well as the editorial fratbr nity, will doubtless be obliged to the editor of the Seneca Farmer corthe translaliond CENSUS OP UNITED STATES. IiAsTEHN 15420. IS3O. La rCa.rr. : 1 4.1 inn 215,335 .161,1:*27 New Hampshire, :.?.74,161 264,53.1 Vermoni, .. . . :23.5,7tA 280,665' 41,900 . .%1 ssay hme tts 5.2.:1,...N-47 610,100 MiS 'onneei i, ut, . Rliode Islam!, 27.5,218 2 )7,711 22,11;3 ki:1,11.19 97,211 1 1,1:)1 iTiT I Nrlw York, . . 1,37%;,1`.2 1,931,4"6 561,6rA Ne% Jersey, .. . :3:20,770 4:1 . .?.04 Pennsylvania, 1,04:1,4.58 1,330,034 1:50,576 Dola wart., .. . . 7:2,749 76,7:17 3,!v18 Maryland, .. . . 407,350 446,913 39,50 929,015 I 4,103,659 Soll'FfidEß N STATES. 1,111;5,366 1,1 P 20.931 1i3 4 ,t°, 6 ,,39 73 4 ,410 99,641. 50%1,711 5H1,.178 7H,737 • -14,10,11H9 Virpjnia, . . . N. Carolina, . . S. Carolina, Georgia, . . . . 2 ,i;ll:i.F.iii 3:I i - . 2 '2 , : II ....i W NST N SPATES. . . 581,134 107,673 ,V 411,255 . . 561,317 68,8,814 121,527 . . 147,178 311,585 194,407 . . 55,311137,573 134,404 .. . 66,586" 137,427 70,841 OE Kentucky, 1 ntlinna, . I Ilinni . Missouri, 1,414,126 2,263,107 souTn-wETERN STATES. 422,413 664,2‘.1 262,000 153,4U7 215,275 62,168 19.7,901 309,216 181,351 - 75,448 97,865 22,417 Tennessee, Louisiana, . Alabama, . 1..3 U 7411_ TER It ITORI Gri Diet. of Columbia, 3:1,039 39,858 6,819 Mirliigno .'1. 4 ,8'16 31,06 22 , '202 Arkansas, ..... :30,:fr's0 16,134 . lIIMEGI 56,1r1 EC.% prn: LAT] ON Eastern States, 1,659,85.1. 1,9 . 51,68'2 9.07,81;1 Middle States, . 3,17:1,9 11 1,108,959 9719,1115 Southern States,: - .',„1 , 17,9'2.5 3,02`2,81` 471,887 INTeste.rit States, 141 1,7 . 2.6 ‘...!,`:263,106 81,`,381 S. IV, States, 779,569 1,307 ; 171 5'26,1100 Teryitories, 56,181 136,611 80,4311 9,637,299 12,7;; 6,649 3,158,440 Total, HON. jUCHARD RUSH. __F rau th o _il,t to Exaininer. In your last paper you mentioned your intention to publish the letter of Richard Rush, of York county, Pa. to the Antiina. sonic Coinmittee of that county. I have since noticed how that letter has affected• the mitsonS,:ind hive seeu their papers com mencing, an attack on the writer, avowedly grounded on the apprehension that the peo rile-will—erelong-claim-his---Eervices-irr-t he first station in the. Government, Such am the fears of the masons, as the direct expres. ions, in their notices of his letter, show-- and their alarm under the prospect is com mensurably great. As they have confessed their apprehensions, and directed their en ergies accordingly; it may interest many of voar readers to be furnished with some dates connected with Mr. Rush's public character. In January 1811, Mr. Bush was appoint ed Attorney General* of Pennsylvania, by Governor Snyder. On the 22d of November . Isll, he wag appointed Col - 1101%44u . of the United States' Treasury; by President Madison. On the. 10th of Februirry 1816, he Nis appointed Attorney General'of the United States, by President Madison., On the 16th of De, eniber, 1817, he was appointed Minister to Great Britian, by President 'Monroe. Orr the 7th of Maid' 1825, he was np pointed Secretary of the Treasury, by Presi dent Adams. _ He also acted ns Secretary of State, by ap pointment from President Madison, during; the interval between the dismissal of Robert -Smith -and the appointment of Mr. Monroe. The assiduity,, fidelity, and ability, and the devotion to the genuine democratic prin ciples of the state and general governinents,' manifested by .Mr..rcush. in those important public trusts are kndwn to all'who. marked -I his history and- survOyekl with'attention the, events of the la 4 twenty years in Pennsyl4: . I yania and the United States. +--- . A bill of indictnient has been fbundibl, 'the'Clrialid Jury:of Std - lblk, against- Freder , Hill, Esq, 'editor of the Now England tibehr -.The indictrnitint is founded on Ar patagregpit:which.opp6areci in late number of oe,GrAilaxy,idesc ri Ayers' Allon,'lm f AcOLaspnic lecturor, alt a "vagysint.*Calst D 19 i ,6';l8 47 1,t.,7 S 1:),3c11 31,7•25 7136,01 80,130